Married at the age of seventeen, Macdonald-Wright moved to Paris with his wife to immerse himself in European art and to study at the
Sorbonne, the
Académie Julian, the
École des Beaux-Arts and the
Académie Colarossi. He and fellow student
Morgan Russell studied with Canadian painter
Percyval Tudor-Hart between 1911 and 1913. They were deeply influenced by their teacher's color theory, which connected the qualities of color to those of music, as well as by the works of
Delacroix, the
Impressionists,
Cézanne, and
Matisse that placed a great emphasis on juxtapositions and reverberations of color. During these years Macdonald-Wright and Russell developed
Synchromism (meaning "with color"), seeking to free their art form from a literal description of the world and believing that painting was a practice akin to music that should be divorced from representational associations. He and Russell returned to the United States hopeful of acclaim and financial success and were eager to promote their cause. ), 1914. In 1915, Stanton's brother, by that time a respected editor and critic in the New York literary world, published one of the first and most comprehensive surveys of advanced art to appear in the United States. Secretly co-authored by Stanton,
Modern Painting: Its Tendency and Meaning reviews the major art movements of the previous century from
Manet to
Cubism, praises the work of
Cézanne (still largely unknown in the United States), and predicts a time, soon to come, when an
abstract art of pure color will supplant realism. Synchromism itself, the subject of a lengthy, adulatory chapter, is presented as that desired end-point, the culmination of the modernist struggle, surpassing the work of "lesser Moderns" like
Kandinsky and the
Futurists; at no time does the author acknowledge his own brother as one of the two originators of that school of art. About his work in this period, Macdonald-Wright commented, "I strive to divest my art of all anecdote and illustration and to purify it to the point where the emotions of the spectator will be wholly aesthetic, as when listening to good music....I cast aside as nugatory all natural representation in my art. However, I still adhered to the fundamental laws of compsiition (placements and displacements of mass, as in the human body in movement) and created my pictures by means of color-form, which, by its organization in three dimensions, resulted in rhythm." Not long after returning to New York, Macdonald-Wright separated from Russell but both continued to work in the Synchromist style, or with Synchromist color effects, though Macdonald-Wright's painting came to include more vestiges of representational imagery. They held another Synchromist exhibition in New York in 1916 and received significant promotion and critical support from Willard. In 1916, Willard and Stanton were key organizers of the prestigious "
Forum Exhibition of Modern American Painters" in New York. Macdonald-Wright exhibited his work at
Alfred Stieglitz's famed
291 gallery in New York in 1917. Yet the sales and the renown that he had hoped for did not materialize, and his financial situation grew desperate. ==California and later life==